Blueblocker's '82 850G's gauges got smashed so he bought a set from a second generation 750L to replace them. It took us a few hours of fiddling but in the end we got them mounted up and working.
There were three multi pin connectors on the gauges, plus a few added bullet type terminals. One of the three connectors was the same so we didn't have to mess with that one, but two others were different so we had to swap them over from the old gauge set to the new because we didn't want to mess with the bikes wiring harness.
Using a small terminal tool (basically a small screwdriver) we were able to remove the terminals from the plastic plug shell on both gauge sets, and then reinstall the electrical terminals into 850 shell. There were a couple of terminals that were different, bullets on the 750 but we needed the small terminals to fit into the 850 shell, so we chopped them off the old 850 gauge harness and spliced them onto the 750 gauge harness so the terminal in need could be plugged into the shell. In the end we were able to get all the wires where they need to be.
For the most part Suzuki used the same wire colors for each function on the different bikes so that really helps find the wires you need. Only real issue we had were those brought on by ourselves (me), plus the 850 has auto cancel turn signals and the 750 gauges don't, so the appropriate harness wires had to be left disconnected.
Last little challenge was that the 750 gauges angled back too much, plus the 850 gauge cluster has integrated attachment studs but the 750 gauges use shoulder bolts to attach. A little bending in the vice "corrected" the 750 gauge angle, and Blueblocker (Kevin) got lucky since my ever growing spare hardware bucket contained a set of the correct gauge bolts.
In total it took us about 3.5 hours to get everything hooked up and tweaked in. Need to talk to Kevin but it appears everything was working as it should, save the auto cancel turn signals.
I suspect the interchange between other model bikes would work out similarly. The spacing between the gauge mounting holes was common so no problem there, plus as mentioned, the wire colors are common so that greatly simplifies getting all the electrons where they need to be.
Good fun!
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